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♡ Amu's Sprite Gallery
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Hellohello! Welcome to my sprite gallery! For those of you who don't know me: Hi! I'm Amuu! PokeHeroes' newest addition to the spriter team! This forum is my personal place to upload all of my spritework (both for the site and not) and document my progress.
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You are welcome to post here! However, if you have an event suggestion, please privately or contact the wonderful spriters onsite (me, Furret, Akemie, Giltine13 & Temy)! If you want me to make you a sprite, this is not the place to ask. I'm considering opening a shop, so stay tuned! c:
So far, I have created:
Buizel (Emera)


Puddy



Cornlet



Did you know I also make egg artwork?:
AND - did you know I've revamped sprites too?:



... Hu? I wonder how they'll be released in the future?





You can find these uncommon rarity puddings over at the Event Shop!





Please contact me if you found anyone playing with grimer, trubbish, and koffing since it's likely TrashBin.
I'm over the moon with how well-received my work has been, and will continue to deliver!
@linozxl - spoiler for a few paragraphs as I like to talk perhaps a bit too much about my interests-

By definition, a sprite is a small 2D
image which is put into a scene/game environment. It can also mean
an object that's in motion/not static. In the 70s/80s, gaming
consoles had hardware that limited the amount of sprites in games,
as well as their colour palettes. This is why older Pokemon games
had little colour. As technology evolved through the decades, image
formats allowed more pixels, more colours, and more fun! Now, our
devices are so fast that they need no assistance with bitmaps,
which is how we can have transparent PNGs, extra shading, high
resolution, etc.
Below are examples of sprites & how they've evolved over the years in Pokemon games. They're compromised of singular pixels and are often small in size. Whilst a sprite did have the above specific meaning, it's become a lot more generalised over the years. Some people call the eevees below sprites, others call them pixel/dot art, and so forth.
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Below are examples of sprites & how they've evolved over the years in Pokemon games. They're compromised of singular pixels and are often small in size. Whilst a sprite did have the above specific meaning, it's become a lot more generalised over the years. Some people call the eevees below sprites, others call them pixel/dot art, and so forth.





tldr: it's a little image drawn where every single pixel is taken into consideration. the mosaic-style images of pokemon and trainers in games like black/white are sprites!